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The Latin American Boom

The Latin American Boom was the explosion of innovative Spanish American fiction in the 1960s and 1970s that brought writers such as Garcia Marquez and Cortazar to worldwide acclaim.

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Definition

The 1960s-1970s flourishing of internationally celebrated Spanish American fiction, associated with magical realism and formal innovation.

Scope

This topic examines the Latin American Boom, the period from roughly the early 1960s to the 1970s when a generation of Spanish American novelists achieved international success and critical recognition. It covers key authors and works, the techniques of magical realism and formal experiment, the role of the publishing industry and translation, the political context of the Cuban Revolution, and debates over what the Boom was and whom it included or excluded.

Core questions

  • Which writers and works defined the Boom?
  • What formal and narrative innovations characterized Boom fiction?
  • How did publishing, translation, and politics drive the Boom's success?
  • Who was excluded from the canonical Boom and why?

Key concepts

  • magical realism
  • formal experiment
  • the publishing boom
  • the total novel
  • the Cuban Revolution context

Key theories

Magical realism
Boom fiction, especially Garcia Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude, is associated with magical realism, in which the marvelous is narrated as part of everyday reality.

History

From the early 1960s, novels such as Cortazar's Hopscotch, Vargas Llosa's The Time of the Hero, and Garcia Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude won international acclaim and a wide readership, aided by Barcelona publishers and translation. Linked to the energy of the Cuban Revolution, the Boom made Spanish American fiction central to world literature, though its mostly male canon was later critically scrutinized.

Debates

Who was excluded from the Boom?
Critics note that the canonical Boom centered a small group of male writers and marginalized women and other authors, prompting reassessment, as Donoso's personal history already hinted.

Key figures

  • Gabriel Garcia Marquez
  • Julio Cortazar
  • Mario Vargas Llosa
  • Carlos Fuentes
  • Jose Donoso

Related topics

Seminal works

  • garciamarquez1967
  • cortazar1963
  • donoso1972

Frequently asked questions

What was the Latin American Boom?
It was the international success of a generation of Spanish American novelists in the 1960s and 1970s, including Garcia Marquez, Cortazar, Vargas Llosa, and Fuentes.
Is the Boom the same as magical realism?
They overlap but are not identical: magical realism is a literary mode strongly associated with the Boom, but Boom writing also included other styles and formal experiments.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts